Podcasts about imperial clinical trials unit

  • 5PODCASTS
  • 6EPISODES
  • 14mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Jan 7, 2021LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about imperial clinical trials unit

Latest podcast episodes about imperial clinical trials unit

Department of Statistics
Florence Nightingale and the politicians’ pigeon holes: using data for the good of society

Department of Statistics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2021 39:15


Professor Deborah Ashby, President of the RSS, gives the 2020 Florence Nightingale lecture. Florence Nightingale, best known as the Lady with the Lamp, is recognised as a pioneering and passionate statistician. She was also passionate about education, having argued successfully with her parents to be allowed to study mathematics, and later nursing, herself. More widely, she offered opinions on the education of children, soldiers, army doctors, and nurses, as well as railing against the ‘enforced idleness’ of women. A particular concern was the lack of statistical literacy among politicians. As we celebrate the bicentenary of her birth, the need for education in statistical and data skills shows no signs of abating. What advice would Florence Nightingale offer were she here today? The Lecture was followed by a Panel Session with Professor Deborah Ashby, Professor David Cox and Professor David Spiegelhalter. The Panel was chaired by Professor Jennifer Rogers about the role of statistics in society. Deborah Ashby is Director of the School of Public Health at Imperial College London where she holds the Chair in Medical Statistics and Clinical Trials, and was Founding Co-Director of Imperial Clinical Trials Unit. She is a Chartered Statistician and her research interests are in clinical trials, risk-benefit decision making for medicines, and the utility of Bayesian approaches in these areas. She has sat on the UK Commission on Human Medicines and acts as adviser to the European Medicines Agency. Deborah was awarded the OBE for services to medicine in 2009, appointed an NIHR Senior Investigator in 2010, and elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2012. She is currently President of the Royal Statistical Society.

Department of Statistics
Florence Nightingale and the politicians’ pigeon holes: using data for the good of society (Transcript)

Department of Statistics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2021


Professor Deborah Ashby, President of the RSS, gives the 2020 Florence Nightingale lecture. Florence Nightingale, best known as the Lady with the Lamp, is recognised as a pioneering and passionate statistician. She was also passionate about education, having argued successfully with her parents to be allowed to study mathematics, and later nursing, herself. More widely, she offered opinions on the education of children, soldiers, army doctors, and nurses, as well as railing against the ‘enforced idleness’ of women. A particular concern was the lack of statistical literacy among politicians. As we celebrate the bicentenary of her birth, the need for education in statistical and data skills shows no signs of abating. What advice would Florence Nightingale offer were she here today? The Lecture was followed by a Panel Session with Professor Deborah Ashby, Professor David Cox and Professor David Spiegelhalter. The Panel was chaired by Professor Jennifer Rogers about the role of statistics in society. Deborah Ashby is Director of the School of Public Health at Imperial College London where she holds the Chair in Medical Statistics and Clinical Trials, and was Founding Co-Director of Imperial Clinical Trials Unit. She is a Chartered Statistician and her research interests are in clinical trials, risk-benefit decision making for medicines, and the utility of Bayesian approaches in these areas. She has sat on the UK Commission on Human Medicines and acts as adviser to the European Medicines Agency. Deborah was awarded the OBE for services to medicine in 2009, appointed an NIHR Senior Investigator in 2010, and elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2012. She is currently President of the Royal Statistical Society.

Infectious Disease
Imperial Clinical Trials Unit (ICTU) video for potential trial participants

Infectious Disease

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2015 7:41


clinical trials imperial clinical trials unit
Immunology & Allergy
Imperial Clinical Trials Unit (ICTU) video for potential trial participants

Immunology & Allergy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2015 7:41


clinical trials imperial clinical trials unit
Academic Health Science Centre
Imperial Clinical Trials Unit (ICTU) video for potential trial participants

Academic Health Science Centre

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2015 7:41


clinical trials imperial clinical trials unit
Global Health
Imperial Clinical Trials Unit (ICTU) video for potential trial participants

Global Health

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2015 7:41


clinical trials imperial clinical trials unit